47
Annotations

Sam quietly passes over the move on poor Sir Harry Vane. He's being asked to furnish any documents in hopes that some may incriminate one of the more respected and tolerant members of the old regime who's refused to fall in line in Charles I's execution.

It's not available online, but here's a summary from Bartleby.com:"The farce consists in dressing up a page as a rich widow, who is wooed by the foolish knight, Sir Gervase Simple. An amusing piece of satirical literary criticism is introduced in the scene where Caperwit, the poetaster, discusses the function of adjectives in verse."

Vane's main crime was that he opposed the return of the monarchy and favored a Parliamentary republic, preferably with a written constitution and far worse did not immediately turn his coat and abandon his beliefs on Restoration. He did not support the execution of the king and was an advocate of religious tolerance far ahead of his time, even to supporting Ann Hutchinson during his time in colonial New England.

"Changes, or Love in a Maze" was a comedy of manners by James Shirley (9/1596 - 10/1666). Here's an excerpt:

Melancholy, hence ! go getSome piece of earth to be thy seat;Here the air and nimble fireWould shoot up to meet desire;Sullen humor, leave her blood,Mix not with the purer flood,But let pleasures swelling thereMake a springtide all the year.

a nail for Nane:"At the Restoration Vane was imprisoned in the Tower of London by the king's order. After several conferences between the houses of parliament, it was agreed that he should be excepted from the indemnity bill, but that a petition should be sent to Charles asking that his life might be spared. The petition was granted. On the meeting, however, of the new parliament of 1661, a vote was passed demanding his trial on the capital charge, and Vane was taken back to the Tower in April 1662 from the Isles of Scilly, where he had been imprisoned"http://www.irelandinformationguide.com/Henry_Va...

For the full text of the treaty with Algiers (and other treaties), downloadable as PDF, see http://visualiseur.bnf.fr/Visualiseur?Destinati...The treaty is generally to the disadvantage of the Algerians, but strangely enough Article VII states that "If any Algerine ships happen to meet any English merchant ships at sea the skipper shall be obliged to deliver up any Spaniards, Genoese, or Portuguese or their goods." - so including the Portuguese (and Charles II just married a Portuguese queen)!

Muscadet, a dry somewhat acid white wine, comes from the Nantes region south of the Loire river. It usually accompanies oisters and seafood, although I have the feeling that it is not as popular in France (or at least in Paris) as it was 40 years ago. I doubt that Mr Lawson would have had access to any in the Mediterranean.

"muscatt; but I know not yet what that is, and am ashamed to ask"Nutmeg (or in Spanish Nuez Moscada) was reintroduced to the West by the Portuguese. In Pepys days it was already grown in Jamaica and other Western Indies. A very expensive spice in those days. The Dutch tried to corner the market and the other European countries to open it. I do not think what Sam got was wine.I am sure Sam knew what to do with wine when he got a bottle!...But there is a possibility that what Samuel got were a few "Muscat nuts". May be Sir Lawson traded them in Lisbon (from the old Indonesian or Ceilon origin) or got them from an English ship coming from Jamaica.In his days Pepys could not Google it! What could he do with these small exotic balls without asking someone? (and lossing face)

If, when it eventually arrives, the Muscatt proves to be nutmeg, then Sam will probably recognise it and Elizabeth almost certainly will. Nutmeg had been in use in England since at least the second half of the 14th century (mentioned by Chaucer in Sir Thopas).

It would have been used in spiced wine, caudles, cakes and custards, to name but a few.

NutmegThe Romans did use nutmeg already, but it was a very very expensive spice.May be people knew the taste of the spice as a powder, mostly because it was easy to adulterate the powder with other substances.Not so if it was in the form of a nut.So I pressume Sam knew the taste of the nutmeg powder, but may be he never saw a muscat nut before.Lets imagine what will happen tomorrow: Sarah sees the nuts and wonders: why, where did you got this expensive Indian nuts?! I saw them in Lady Montagu's kitchen. I have a recipe for a very tasty cake baked with the powder of this nuts, if your Lorship likes.

Nutmeg, Muscat: French, from Old French, from Old Provençal *muscat, from musc, musk, from Late Latin muscus ; see musk.Muscat in Arabic ” Place of Falling”“…Nutmeg:- Nutmeg is an evergreen tree that is native to the Moluccas area of east Indonesia. Today it is widely cultivated in southern Asia, the West Indies, and Brazil for its fruits, which yield two spices, and for its timber. The fruit is fleshy and yellow having a diameter of about 5 centimeters (2 inches), popularly called the nutmeg apple, which splits into two halves, thereby revealing the seed surrounded by an outer coating resembling a fleshy, reddish net. This seed is dried to form the spice popularly known as nutmeg. The fleshy reddish coat around the seed is peeled off and dried to form the spice known as mace. Nutmeg trees grow to a height of about 15 meters (50 feet).…”Portugal built a Fort at Muscat in Oman Was a nice place to gather all the spices.Muscatel: Wine made from Muscat grapes, http://www.taproom.com/beer/wineterm.htms usally sweet and usually high in alcohol.musky falling nut ???

According to a couple of Portuguese sites nutmeg, Noz-moscada, originated from the Banda Islands in the archipelago of the Moluccas. First discovered by one Antonio Abreu in 1511 or thereabouts.

"In 1621 Jan Pieterszoon Coen, the governor-general of the V.O.C. in the Dutch East-Indies, gave order to kill all the Bandanese people on the Banda-Islands because they were not willing to allow the Dutch getting a trademonopoly for nutmegproduction on Banda. An enormous tragedy. 15.000 Bandanese people were killed by the Dutch."

"Muscadet: Not to be confused with Muscat or Muscatel, this is another name for the Melon de Burgogne grape. The vineyards using Muscadet are in the lower Loire, in Brittany, France. The wines are crisp, and light . . . used to compliment the seafood of the same region in which they were grown."

"Muscadine: Native North American grape, found originally in the southeast. The most common variety of this class is Scuppernong. Although it has its followers among home winemakers, the Scuppernong has not excited anyone in the Vinifera wine world because of its very intense flavor"---i.e., it's "foxy."

"Muscatel: Wine made from Muscat grapes, usually sweet and usually high in alcohol."

"MUSCADINE, MUSCATT: muscatel wine: the use 'muscatt', which puzzled P, OED 1747, though 'musticat' 1578 (Scotland) and 'muscat' for 'muscat grape' 1655; muscatel is strong and sweet, and the description was accorded to strong sweet wines even when not products of the muscat grape"

nutmeg cake that Sam ate. From one of Pepys sites:http://www.pepys.info/cakes.htmland from "our" diary in March 1660:"Here I lay and took a thing for my cold, namely a spoonful of honey and a nutmeg scraped into it, by Mr. Bowyer's direction, and so took it into my mouth, which I found did do me much good.”

more on history of nutmeg? big apples? who rules the sea? inhttp://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/isb...“Yet 370 years ago, Run’s harvest of nutmeg (a pound of which yielded a 3,200 percent profit by the time it arrived in England) turned it into the most lucrative of the Spice Islands, precipitating a battle between the all-powerful Dutch East India Company and the British Crown. The outcome of the fighting was one of the most spectacular deals in history: Britain ceded Run to Holland but in return was given Manhattan. This led not only to the birth of New York but also to the beginning of the British Empire.” and also” The British transplanted the trees to colonial Bencoolen and Singapore and Ceylon, and, oh yes, nutmeg didn’t cure the plague either.”

May be all this nutmeg annotations should be in Background information, where there is a Nutmeg entry already.

muscatt:Thanks for clearing that up, Bradford. Ruben's nutmeg theory was clever but unsupported by any evidence that "muscat" has been so used in English (the OED provides none). Which is yet another reason that nutmeg material should go in the Background section, since it turns out to be irrelevant here.

"...and muscatt; but I know not yet what that is, and am ashamed to ask...."reviewing this statement leads me to ask, why does doth he sayeth this:He has eaten and seen a Nutmeg;http://www.pepysdiary.com/diary/1661/07/22/http://www.pepysdiary.com/diary/1660/03/12/he has drunk Muscatel,was it because it was called in PORTUGUESE as Noz moscada. the Portuguese accent makes it a strange sound [need a Portuese guy to rit it in accent'd anglais]"Muscadine or muscadel, a rich sort of wine. "Vinum muscatum quod moschi odorem referat.”http://www.pepysdiary.com/diary/1660/11/19/] So it leads me to think the words in this Kandelarum that be used were strange sounding and because there be the elapse in time there by the translation presented be more modern than the wot he doth rote.little editorial???Sam knows the latin words of nux and muscus.But the portuguese version may floor him.

May I insist that Pepys knew the nutmeg from his taste in his food or drink or medicine and probably saw the nutmeg POWDER, but may be he never saw a NUT. Old nuts have no scent until you grind them. Considering the long voyage (months) from wherever Indies they came from, it sounds to me that this where nuts and not any wine or powder.

Another point is that (I learnt) English grammar was not definitive in those days and more than that, as Pepys wrote in his peculiar code, we do not know for sure the exact pronunciation of what he intended to write.

Having Moscat Nuts in his pocket was for Samuel a way to go upstairs in the social ladder. He, the son of a tailor, was now the owner of this expensive nuts. Not that he knew what to do with them.

As Pepys talks about gooseberries "as big as nutmegs" and a spoonful of honey "with nutmeg scraped into it" I think we can assume he knows what a nutmeg looks like and how it is used. (See Cumgranissalis' links above)

Of course not.This world is interesting because of some inherent inconsistencies. I do not expect Pepys to raise from his tomb, as I would like, and tell us what he intended to remember in his diary. I am sorry for this. I love this young man.So, like a Talmudic scholar, I have to speculate. As they say in Italy: “Si non e vero, e ben trovato”.(if it’s not the truth, at least it’s well made up!).If you can rule out that Pepys was using the Spanish or Portuguese word for Moscada wrongly spelled, languages he did use sometimes, then I will agree with you.In the meantime let me imagine the long journey in Captain Teddiman’s ship made by this Muscatt thing (whatever it was).

The English Language is a de-light with it's absorption of obscure words that appear to contradict, gives work to the purists and others that try to make sense of 'wot be sed'. Naturally there others that enjoy being a obfuscator

Perhaps we can read the entry as saying that he had received word in the letter from Captain Teddiman that the gifts were on their way, but that they have not actually arrived yet.

So Sam doesn't have the items in hand and has been foxed by an unfamiliar name for a familiar thing -- maybe Teddiman intentionally used 'moscat' to heighten their anticipation? Sam might very well recognize the nutmegs when they arrive.

Thanks to your website I found some information on a Hebrew name that I was researching in connection with blessings recited on spices. There is a reference to the work of Rabbi Mordechai ben Hillel Ashkenazi, (died 1298)known as the "Mordechai",who quotes his teacher Rabbi Meir of Rothenburg (died 1293)about the appropriate blessing to recite on a spice which transliterated from the Hebrew is Muscata or Muscada, (as in the Spanish). These Rabbis lived in Germany in Rhineland so it indicates that the muscat nut was used there.

MuscatI don't think it could have been muscat grapes, a# because they wouldn't travel well ; and b) because in any case they don't ripen until September or perhaps late August at the earliest. So nutmeg #called noix de muscade in French) is a good suggestion.As for recognising a nutmeg : had he actually seen what he had been sent, or just been told what had been sent ?

" a peace made upon good terms, by Sir J. Lawson, with the Argier men"

The articles of peace between Charles II. and Algiers, concluded 30th Aug. 1664, by Admiral Thomas Allen, according to instructions from the Duke of York, being the same articles concluded by Sir John Lawson, 23rd April, 1662, and confirmed 10th November following. They are reprinted in Somers's Tracts, vol. vii., p. 554, Sir W. Scott's edition.---Diary and correspondence of Samuel Pepys, the diary deciphered by J. Smith. 1854.

Wondering now whether Dorothy Sayers (who would have been familiar with the history of this period) named her heroine Harriet Vane after the Harry Vane mentioned here. The stubborness and adherence to principles in Harriet Vane's character certainly echo Harry Vane's.

Charles was not naturally bloodthirsty, so he had previously been quite happy to agree to clemency for Vane. However, Vane had made personal enemies because of his Commonwealth role sitting on both the 'Sequestration Committee ' and the 'Committee for Compounding with Delinquents', which dealt with confiscations and fines levied upon the estates and persons of defeated Royalists. Although the latter had lost the war, they were now elevated back to office due to the power vacuum after Oliver's death. As Vane had fallen out with all sides and had no powerful protectors, his persecutors were in a position to exact revenge, and did so with relish.

Like his father before him, Charles was prepared to allow Parliament to claim its chosen quarry if that was to his (Charles') benefit.

One must see these events in the context that that the loyalty of most members of the Cavalier Parliament was not unconditionally to the King, but to their own perceived collective interest as the landed ruling class. The King was their figurehead, tool, and ally, but as the years went on, divisions grew, both within Parliament, and between Parliament and the King. Thus the English Party system was born

"muscatt; but I know not yet what that is, and am ashamed to ask." I have no doubt that it was nutmeg (noix de muscade): if it were wine or grapes, Sam would certainly know.

Interestingly, from about 1500, the word "mace", previously referring to various spices, came to be used for the rind of the nutmeg. The (full) OED quotes a source referring to "the rynde of the nux musticata, the notmygge, "

Teddiman obviously sent a labelled package, and they all nodded and smiled wisely whilst wondering something like "what the Deuce is this?" :)

There may well be an etymological link to the muscatel grape, so named because of its musk-like perfume.

The reason that Lee was trawling through the Navy office archive is that Vane was firstly, under both King and Commonwealth, a former Treasurer of the Navy (the post now being held by Sir George Carteret); secondly, he sat on a series of Commonwealth committees to oversee and reform the Navy, including the drafting of articles of war.

This search for incriminating evidence did not really concern Sam, as the relevant events were well before his time. It may well have been of more concern to Penn and Batten, who were in the Navy under Cromwell. The "Sir Williams" were not a target, but they would not want to get caught in the crossfire.

It seems taht the "Sir Williams" dealt with the situation in different ways. Batten kept his distance ("nothing to do with me Guv!"), but Penn joined the "Councellor"* and Sam for lunch, not forgetting to bring his attractive daughter, both to distract the gentleman, and to restrict the conversation to polite topics, ie not potentially treasonous activities!

*I guess that the word "Councellor" here means in the sense of a lawyer.